So up he rose, and thence amounted streight.
Which when the carle beheld, and saw his
guest
Would safe depart for all his subtill
sleight, 480
He chose an halter from among the rest,
And with it hung himselfe, unbid unblest.
But death he could not worke himselfe
thereby;
For thousand times he so himselfe had
drest,[*]
Yet nathelesse it could not doe him die,
485
Till he should die his last, that is, eternally.

* * * *
*

CANTO X

Her faithfull knight faire
Una brings
to house of Holinesse,
Where he is taught repentance, and
the way to heavenly blesse.

I

What man is he, that boasts of fleshly might
And vaine assurance of mortality,
Which all so soone as it doth come to
fight
Against spirituall foes, yeelds by and
by,
Or from the field most cowardly doth fly?
5
Ne let the man ascribe it to his skill,
That thorough grace hath gained victory.
If any strength we have, it is to ill,
But all the good is Gods, both power and eke will.

II

But that, which lately hapned, Una saw,
10
That this her knight was feeble, and too
faint;
And all his sinews woxen weake and raw,
Through long enprisonment, and hard constraint,
Which he endured in his late restraint,
That yet he was unfit for bloudy fight:
15
Therefore to cherish him with diets daint,
She cast to bring him, where he chearen
might.
Till he recovered had his late decayed plight.

III

There was an auntient house[*] not farre away,
Renowmd throughout the world for sacred
lore, 20
And pure unspotted life: so well
they say
It governd was, and guided evermore,
Through wisedome of a matrone grave and
hore
Whose onely joy was to relieve the needes
Of wretched soules, and helpe the helpelesse
pore: 25
All night she spent in bidding of her
bedes,
And all the day in doing good and godly deedes.